Cadillac Engine, V-63, Popular ^ell-Balanced and Harmon ized Mechanism Has Im pressed Car Owners. Sine* the announcement of the new- V-63, the feature which has made the moat outstanding lmpres slon upon Cadillac owners and the general public has been the per formance of the new', inherently balanced and harmonized engine, ac cording to Jay W. Dunivan, Cadillac manager of distribution. "Because of exhaustive tests made before the new car was placed In production, the company offered the new typo with absolute assurance, but we wer* scarcely prepared for the general quick grasp of the engineer Ing principle'by those who consider themselves ‘motor wise’ only in the most practical sense,” states Mr. Dunivan. "We have also had many state ments from automotive engineers that the persistence with which the Cadillac company has adhered to the one principle of engine design has been ono of the outstanding phases of recent motor car history. Cadillac engineers have consistently held that the motor car is primarily a passen ger carrying vehicle and that the engine should be of a type which would leave the greatest percentage »f chassis space for body purposes. The rigidity of the short crankshaft and crankcase, and the smooth flow of power in the 00-degree, V-eight design, have been added factors which have determined them In con tinuing the V-type. 90-degree, eight cylinder design. Truck Master Title N of Truck Drivers L. ft. Fisher of Rochester, N. V , Is the winner of the national content of the General Motors company of Pontiac, Mich., for the best suggestion for a new name for a motor driver. This contest was started several months ago with the idea of finding a name which would improve tho mo rale and fit the man who has charge of a motor truck. The contest was started as the result of a suggestion by a national magazine which assert ed that the drivers of a locomotive, a street car or an automobile all had a separate classification and that the motor truck driver should have some designation. Ths name suggested by Mr. Fisher | and picked as the best of all the sug gestions received, was "truck mas ter.” Kxeeutives of the General Motors Truck company feel that the term “truck master" expresses the position of the operator of a motor truck much omre clearly than that simply of "driver.” In nearly every ease the driver of a motor truck Is In charge of that truck and he has one or more assistants working for him. Michigan Map Maker Has Prai sc for Bunk Roadster Maps—how Interesting and service zdlie they are—hut most of us would rather make use of them than make tii n. Not sn_with John K. Nellish, whose maps of Michigan trunk line roads ore known throughout the vonntry. Having just returned from a tour r f nior* than 1.800 miles of ronds in Null »ho lower and upper peninsula of Michigan, he states that his new l!~4 Buick six roadster consumed only 1G.G miles per gallon of gasoline on the entire trip, with the* last GOO avernpr ing IS miles to the gallon. The four wheel brakes. hr* declared, worked t*» perfection. (Junker City Firm Buys 300 White Taxicabs An order for 500 White taxicabs bun been received by the White compan> from the Quaker City Cab com pan.', of Philadelphia, of which C. S Jarvis is president. 1 tis one of the fargesr orders ever placed for commercial vehicles and wiil give the Quaker City Cab company one of the larges* taxicab fleets in the country. The new' cabs will embody all the latent features essential for the com fort, of riders. Deliveries on the record order w ill begin at an earl;, date. Fat Man s Job. Cleveland, Oci IS.—Swimming the English • hannel le a fat man game, Carbis \. V/nlker of Cleveland, whu swam aar and it would appear that they ate puce more to tie highly instru mental in earning and cementing an even closer regard on the part of that great Pacific empire which is now passing through the hour of Its great os' need. N’o other man knows his New York as does O. O. McIntyre. He tells about it each day In The Evening Bee. Dealers Will Handle Yellow Cab Express The new Yellow C'ab one-ton truck, known as the Yellow Cab express, will be marketed through a dealer organization and factory subsidiaries, according to a recent announcement by officials of the Yellow Cab Manu facturing company. This is the first time in the history of the company that a Y’ellow Cab product has been made available to dealers, and was prompted. It Is said, by a country-wide demand that the new truck unit be distributed through conventional trade channels. This new policy will in no way af fect the present plan of selling Yellow Ccbr, which are sold direct to the user. efore any definite selling plan had been decided upon, scores of applica tions for dealerships were received from all over the country. It U said. General Motors Leads in Amount of Sales The motor cars exhibited at the national automobile shows are assign ed to their places by an election in which dollars are the ballots. The honor of first place goes to that car for which purchasers have paid the largest total amount of money for the preceding 12 months, ending June 30. At the New York Automobile show In January, 1924. three of the divis ions of General Motors will have leading places. Fulck for the sixth consccutiVa year will have first place. Chevrolet will have second place and Cadillac, sixth. The drawings for space were rnadie at the national automobile Chamber of Commerce in New York, October 4. Oakland Open Models Now Equipped With New Top To meet the demand for closed car comfort In open car models, the Oak land Motor Car company has made special provision on the new 192! models. Because it has become less customary in recent years for owners to drive with the top down and be cause a permanent top permits the embodying of many features that make for more perfect weather-proof construction, Oakland has adopted this type of top on all open models. Five hows are used on this top which makes it possible to obtain a much bet'/ > shape: for 'he top to con form closely to the body, and to eliminate the top overhanging the body in the front. As the result of the five-bow construction, the top Is much stronger than the regulation folding top and is 17 pounds lighter than the pre lous Oakland tops Heat of Flexing Hard on Casings Cord Casing, 33x5, Will Flex 358,000 Time^ in 100 Mile Drive. An ordinary piece of steel wire will become hot after b%ng flexed a few times and in the course of a minute or two will break. The ordinary au tomobile casing is called upon to witstand the action of this heating and flexing millions of times. A 33x5 cord casing, for example, will flex 338,800 times in a 100-mile drive. Each time any given spot in the casing flexes when It strikes the ground a little bit of heat is gener ated inside the tire. This brings about an additional problem for the tech nical man who Is charged with the responsibility of giving the car own er a muxirpum amount of mileage In each casing. He must devise a means of escape for this Internal heat. It Is destructive to the tire because It serves to separate the plies of fabric. Therefore, the sidewall of any au tomobile tire is made very thin so as to afford a means of escape for the heat. Rubber is pretty much of a non conductor of heat, so the sidewall must be thin. Some of the heat gen erated inside of the casing is ab sorbed by the metal rim which la a good heat conductor. This principle of heat generation can be easily fo«|pd out by any mo torist simply by feeling the tire after driving some time without a stop. The tire will be warmer than the at mosphere. A 33x5 casing in the course of a nrmal season of driving will flex from 15.00U,oftO to 35.000.000 times, which meant) from 5.000 to 10,000 miles, according to Miller tire men. In all of these millions of flexings the tire must be prepared to absorb md throw off the strain without breaking, as the piece of steel wire does after 20 or 30 flexings. Improvements in Willys-Knight Cars Certain notable changes In the de sign of the Wtllys-Knlght five and seven passenger sedans have greatly added to these two models already noted for their distinctive beauty. Chief among these Innovations are longer, freer lines sweeping" back from the radiator, which Immediately impart a distinction that is much ad rnired by those who -have inspected the models . The windshield with a lower divi sion that swings open for ventilation, with a metal sunshade and a wind shield wiper, form a unit that can not be surpassed for completeness and convenience, while the clock, speedometer, oil gauge and switches are grouped in greater symmetry on the instrument board. A clever arrangement of webbing in the roof of the car results in an astonishing degree of inside quietness that has ben widely commented upon. That the designer had the comfort of the passengers at heart is. shown hv the adoption of much wider win dows throughout, and by the provision for lowering the windows in the front doors to a point below the sills, which allows ore's arm to rest at ease on the sill. / The steering whepl has been raised The seats are well pitched at a com fortable angle. Once Chosen, Always Used All over the world, in 2^4 different lines of business.'you will hear owners make this statement with a degree of finality that leaves no room for doubt or argument: “Give Graham Brothers Truck a reason able opportunity to prove its merit, and your choice of transportation equip ment is usually determined for all time." I Trm CIVMM. S134S; fli Tax. I1M\ tab DbitBit a* CiMirlNt, 1*4 O’BRIEN-DAVIS AUTO CO. ?»TH AND HARNEY STS. TEL HA RNEY 01M fkUci and 5srvk# Branches at Cssmcil Bluffs, la. Danlson, la. * *•<** fcf t "*>r LAm ^Aiimu Good Brakes Needed Due to Fast Driving In these days of crowded traffic conditions ample braking power Is a vital necessity, according to Mr. Grunwald, Stutz distributor. "When cars travel the city streets in a steady procession from morning to night at such comparatively high speeds as they do today, there can't be any guess work about brakes,” states Mr. Grunwald. "The driver, to be sure of his own safety and that of the passengers In the car Just ahead of him, must know that his brakes operate efficiently and quickly. He must know to a nicety how much distance Is required for him to come to a dead stop. His brakes must always be in perfect adjustment. "Freedom from brake worry is al ways the rule with the man or wo man who drives the Stutz Six. The giant brakes—at least 10 per cent larger than those of comparable cars —afford a mighty, equally applied grip over such a large braking area that the Stutz Six can be stopped with incredible swiftness.” Isotta Selects Champion Plugs Italian Company's Selection Make* Champion's Domina tion in Europe Greater. Robert A. ytrattahan, president cl the Champion Spark Plug r-orppany, announces that Champion spark plugs have been chosen as standard equipment on the Isotta Fraa< hint, tlie well-known Italian car and one of the finest automobiles manufac tured in Europe. This makes the 12th European mo tor car to select Champions as regu lar equipment, nine of which have done so since the introduction of slllltnanite as the core for Cham pion plugs, and for which this com pany has exclusive rights through Its discovery and development of this In sulatlng mineral. Other European manufacturers now using Champions as standard include such widely known cars as the His pano Suiza, Citroen, Itelage, Peugeot, Minerva, Lorraine Dettrich, Fnic, Tal hot, Mors, Voisln and Panhard. Champions are now being used as standard in more than 75 per rent of the finest European cars, and in this country on more than per cent of all automobiles produced. New Bearings Bronze. Under the name of Durex. General Motors corporation has perfected a new porous, oil absorbing, copper tin bearing bronze. The new product pos sesses a large number of pores which will ‘ sbsorbe lubricating oils or greases up to 25 per cent of the vol ume of the bearings. Under test it has been found of use in any place In which bearing materials are or dinarily used, and in many cases has even satisfactorily replaced hall and roller !>earing.«. Foreign guests In first class hotels in Berlin now pay In excess of lid a day, an unheard of sum in prewar years. German citizens pay from ona fifth to one half that rate California Law Will Be Enforced! Nev Vehicle Act Requires Motorists to Keep to Right of Street. Serious trouble Is to be encoun tered by motorists who fail to observe the provision in the new California vehicle act. which states that all ve hicles must operate on the right hand edge of the right half of the highway or street, according to a warning issued yesterday by officials of the Auto club of Southern Cali fornia. Autoists cannot proceed at a leis urely pace down the center of the road under the new law, refusing to move over to the right and give the right of way to faster moving ve hicles Only In oases where It Is necessary to draw out to pass an other car, is It permissible to use the center of the highway, thus blocking traffic. Auto cjub officers state that much traffic congestion Is caused by heed less or stubborn motorists who main tain unusually slow rate of speed down the middle of the road and re fuse to pull to the right, allowing other vehicles to go ahead at a fea aonable rate of speed. Rich With Oil. Tokio, Oct. 13.—Prof. Ikl of Toyo university has Just returned from a year’s sojourn In North Saghallen, among the fish-eating natives. He describes the habits of these people. but more Interesting is hi* statement about oil. He save petroleum U oo/, lng out of the ground all over the northern part of the laland and that oil poola of great else are found every where. CADILLAC Type 61 Cadillac Touring— New tire*, new paint, me chanically perfect. Hansen re-built and re-newed cars mean your protection and guarantee. A SAFE PLACE TO BUY J. H. HANSEN Cadillac Company HA 0710 Farnam at 26th ' The Camp* for Pam m fa—Sod to rfcii Mm oad M ■tripod io rod. Silk velour* uphoburr. Hooter, dnrme I if Ht rim, roor »U» mirror, etc-, an itaofard apipfnftu. What Would You Expect to Pay for a Car So Fine? Here it > Coape of rare beauty. It ha* a luaurioa* Fiiher body—complete to the *malle*t detail. It ha* a brand new, *i*-cylinder engine - •moothei and more powerful, and carrying a 15,000 lijile performance guarantee. It ha* Four-wheel Brake*—limple, tried and true. It* control* are centraliied on the steeriAg wheel — exclusive, and re markable convenient. It shows a road performance, under every condition, that inters the moat critical driver*. What would you expect to pay for this thoroughly fine car.’ Your guess, if based on previous values, will be wrong—for the price is only $ 1 345 f. o. b. factory. The V*M and Bunn*m Comfit art rtmt at M and cotnfilau at tha Coopt tot Foot. At *1 195, and *1195. reeftr.Iwh, I- a. h. factory, tkttr yalaet are nut at cwmou Be fair ottk yoarttlf and root family See the Tree BUte Oakland before yoa bay. Prices Open Models /. o. b. Pontiac Touring Car, *94 S Roadster. t945 Sport Tourmf. *1095 Sport Roadster, *1095 OAKLAND MOTOR CAR CO. Oakland Bldg.. 20th ard Harney St*. Telephone AT Untie 2929 Omaha. Neb. The Goodwin-Jenkins Oakland Sale* Co., 125 South Main Street, Council Bluffs, In I ■ * Frttfhi and Tax Extra Hudson Prices Speedster ■ J12°7 7-Pass. Phaeton 1570 Coach • * 1777 Sedan • • 18*77 Freight and Tax Extra -1-1 Aluminum Body by a Famous Builder The Hudson Sedan gives cus tom-built quality with a price ad vantage of bund reds of dollars over cars of comparable fine ness and chassis excellence. More Than 70,000 Coaches in Service At practically open car cost,* the Coach combines all closed car com forts with famous chassis quality. Increasing thousands find it meets every need, at a big saving in cost. On the Greatest Super-Six Chassis Ever Built n tssex Prices Toonnfc * * $1045 Cabnolet - - 1145 Coach • - - 1145 F-+iiht and Taj Ext-.: Sold and Serviced by KILLY MOTOR CAR CO. AT Untie 7461 2060-62 Farnam Street Omaha, Neb.